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Vowing to Put People Before Corporate Interests, Sanders Agrees He Poses 'Existential Threat to the Democratic Party'

"I want to convert the Democratic Party, to break its dependency on big money and corporate interests, and make it a party of working-class people, of young people, of all people who believe in justice."

CNBC on Tuesday released editor at large John Harwood's new interview with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a candidate in the 2020 Democratic presidential primary race . (Photo: CNBC/screenshot)

White House hopeful Sen. Bernie Sanders on Tuesday agreed with centrist group Third Way that he poses an "existential threat" to the Democratic Party and called for transforming it to serve working-class people in a wide-ranging interview with CNBC's John Harwood.

After Sanders, a democratic socialist, said that "what I am trying to do, in many ways, is pick up where Franklin Delano Roosevelt left off," Harwood asked, "Do you also embrace the part of FDR that said adversaries hate me and I welcome their hatred?"

"Absolutely," the senator responded. "You can judge a person by the friends they have. You can judge a candidate for president by the enemies they have."

Sanders caucuses with Senate Democrats—and is seeking the party's 2020 presidential nomination—but has represented Vermont as an Independent in Congress since his first term in the House in 1991. In the interview, he added:

There was a guy who was head of Third Way, the corporate wing of the Democratic Party. He said, "Bernie Sanders is an existential threat to the Democratic Party." I agree with him. I am. I want to convert the Democratic Party, to break its dependency on big money and corporate interests, and make it a party of working-class people, of young people, of all people who believe in justice.

Watch:

Sanders' comment to CNBC came in response to remarks from Jon Cowan, president of the centrist think tank Third Way, published by The Guardian in June. At a gathering of a couple hundred "moderates" in South Carolina, Cowan reportedly said, "I don't believe a self-described democratic socialist can win" the White House.

Cowan told The Guardian that Sanders "has made it his mission to either get the nomination or to remake the party in his image as a democratic socialist" and "that is an existential threat to the future of the Democratic Party for the next generation."

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Sanders and his surrogates have embraced Cowan's description. The senator tweeted on July 10 that "the Wall Street-funded Third Way thinks we are an existential threat—and they're right. We are an existential threat to the corporatism and greed that keeps their donors in power."

The next day, Sanders campaign senior adviser and speechwriter David Sirota toldThe Hill, "Bernie Sanders is an existential threat to that faction of the Democratic Party."

"Bernie Sanders is an existential threat to Wall Street continuing to rip off Americans as a business model—a business model of fraud," Sirota said.

On social media, progressives and journalists applauded Sanders for his interview performance on CNBC:

In the interview, Sanders discussed some of his proposed reforms for Wall Street. He also called fossil fuel executives "criminals," reiterated his "demand that every American has healthcare as a human right," and stood by his recent statement distinguishing himself from fellow White House hopeful Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) by noting that she has said, "I am a capitalist to my bones."

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Further

Prepping for Saturday's protests in D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser went for the grand gesture - and a symbolic middle finger to the racist cowering in the White House - and had "Black Lives Matter" painted in yuge yellow letters on the city's main drag. Bowser's action, aimed at recognizing the thousands in the streets "craving to be heard and to be seen," was criticized by some activists as "performative distraction," but many celebrated it as a vital tribute: "We are saying it loud. We are here."

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